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02 December 2011

Jordan Wimmer, 29, a former £500,000-a-year marketing executive at Nomas Capital, said that her boss Mark Lowe described his "lust" for his Malaysian girlfriend and told the employee she was "too commercial looking" because of her blonde hair and blue eyes.

Miss Wimmer, who alleges sexual harrassment, said: "He spoke about how he loved Asians and how exotic they look".

She added: "I think it was extraordinarily inappropriate and demeaning when your boss is only talking to you about teenage love and lust stories about his Malaysian girlfriend."

Miss Wimmer accepted that she did not know that a woman called Ling had been in a relationship with Mr Lowe for some time before she joined the firm.
She also admitted that she had been having an affair with a married father of two children for some time.

This tramp bigot ended up losing her case. Word to the other lumberjack girls (lumberjanes?) out there, not all Asians are escorts!

29 November 2011

The defense contractor apparently refused to watch the footage of these slobs, but now “After the station’s report, officials from the plant said in a statement that 17 of its employees have been “suspended pending discharge.”

That’s right, suspended, not fired. I have a feeling the MyFox Detroit will keep on eye on what happens to those bums.

As a matter of public policy the government really needs to get out of the weed patrol business, but here we might have an instance where the government should be involved. If government is the customer, they have every right to demand conditions from a supplier, just as an employer has every right to dictate what people on their property have running through their bodies. Hopefully Tower Defense's customers will vote with their dollars and find a new supplier.

A bill to downgrade Iran's relations with Britain got final approval on Monday, state broadcaster IRIB reported, a day after parliament approved the measure compelling the government to expel the British ambassador.

Iranian legislature votes to expel British ambassador and the people celebrate riot.

British embassy attack in Iran: live
Live coverage as Iranian protesters storm and loot the British embassy in Tehran, tearing down the Union flag and throwing petrol bombs.

Latest
13.13 Damien McElroy tweets:A new group called "The Muslim Students Followers of the Supreme Leader' issues statement, signed in blood, claims embassy breach

13.07 The sanctions were part of a coordinated raft of unilateral measures announced on November 14 by Britain, the United States and Canada to further pressure Iran to halt its controversial nuclear programme.

Britain has threatened to act "robustly" if Iran's foreign ministry follows through by kicking out its ambassador, Dominick Chilcott, who took up his post only last month.

New satellite imagery shows the extent of damage to the Iranian military compound that blew up earlier this month, was extensively damaged, the Institute for Science and International Security said after an analysis of new satellite imagery.

ISIS compared a November 22 image from DigitalGlobe to one from September.

"Some buildings appear to have been completely destroyed. Some of the destruction seen in the image may have also resulted from subsequent controlled demolition of buildings and removal of debris. There do not appear to be many pieces of heavy equipment such as cranes or dump trucks on the site, and a considerable amount of debris is still present," according to the analysis posted on ISIS website.

A large explosion has been reported in the Iranian city of Isfahan as the regime issued conflicting reports apparently designed to deny any suggestions of a sabotage attack on its nuclear facilities.
Officials gave varying accounts of a "huge explosion" in the ancient city, which hosts one of Iran's main facilities for refining uranium in its nuclear programme.

While some sources told news agencies there had been a blast on military facilities, others said there had been a fireball at a petrol station.

Residents of the city were independently telling relatives and friends overseas that the city had been shaken by a massive blast in the early afternoon.

The reports immediately prompted speculation that Iran had suffered another sabotage attack, just two weeks after a blast at a missile base gave rise to similar suspicions.

An explosion rocked the western Iranian city of Isfahan on Monday, the semi-official Fars news agency reported, adding that the blast was heard in several parts of the city.

According to reports, frightened residents called the fire department after the blast, forcing the city authorities to admit there had been an explosion.Residents reported that their windows shook from the explosion's force.

Speaking to an Iranian news website, the government of Isfahan said that the explosion occurred as a result of a military drill, denying reports that the blast was somehow related to the nearby nuclear facility.

"There is no such thing, the blast was entirely from the military maneuver," the Iranian official said.

The Isfahan uranium conversion plant operates under the supervision of the International Atomic Energy Agency, and is frequented by its inspectors and surveyed by cameras that broadcast to the IAEA headquarters in Vienna.

Thus, had the explosion occurred at the nuclear site, the UN's nuclear watchdog would have known of the incident.

Speaking with Fars news agency earlier Monday, Isfahan’s deputy mayor initially confirmed the reports and said the authorities are investigating the matter. However, after the incident was reported in Israel, the report was taken off the Fars website.

It seems that city authorities and the Iranian government were embarrassed by the reports of a blasts, releasing contradictory versions of the alleged events. One example is a statement given by the same deputy mayor to the Mehr news agency, saying he had no reports of an explosion.

28 November 2011

Two 73-year old former CFL players, Joe Kapp (former B.C. Lions' and Minnesota Vikings quarterback, actor, Cal head coach and B.C. GM) and Angelo Mosca (former Hamilton Tiger-Cats' defensive tackle and professional wrestler) got into a fight. They exchanged cane blows, punches, bull rush moves and more at the CFL Alumni Legends Luncheon in Vancouver on Friday, Nov. 25, just two days before the Grey Cup.